E-zines

Reviews of e-zines.

Journal of Mythic Arts, Summer 2007

The Endicott Studio Journal of Mythic Arts is an online magazine which features a wide variety of offerings on folklore themes; fiction, articles, poetry, and art can all be found on the website. The fiction offerings are numerous, many of them from big names.
The theme for the Summer 2007 issue is Young Adult Mythic, […]

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Strange Horizons, September 2007

In September, Strange Horizons offered four quite different stories.
I expect that some people will find the first, “All Kinds of Reasons” by Katherine Maclaine, a difficult read. Set in a near future where it is possible to predict the genetic deformities an embryo will possess, it focuses on two hopeful parents, Tony and Rhia. The […]

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Clarkesworld Magazine, #13, Oct. 2007

Clarkesworld Magazine is an online ‘zine that’s been running for thirteen issues as I write this, although I must admit I haven’t previously read it. Coming across it for the first time, I had no preconceptions, and I found some intelligent and literate fiction which I admired, but also found myself wanting more.
In “A Dance […]

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Hub #27 - 30

I was only a couple of paragraphs into “House Trainer” by Kenneth B. Chiacchia in Hub #27 when I thought, “Why didn’t I think of this idea?” Much has been written about home AIs, where the house has a personality of sorts, but Chiacchia’s take on it is a real treat.
Joyce has […]

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Hub #8–12

In a world so polluted that the ocean and sky have turned colors you don’t usually see outside of a sixty-four count crayon box, Matthew is…
“One in a Million,” which happens to also be the title of the story in Hub #8.
He’s also special.
And, he’s different from everyone else.
The problem is, when author […]

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Shiny #1

Shiny is an e-zine all about the fiction. More specifically, it’s all about YA fiction. A brief introduction from its editorial triumvirate explains that they see YA spec fic as being “pretty shiny right now.” It’s an argument that has some support, as evidenced by the sizable list of authors they reel off. So, reasoned […]

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Aeon #11

Aeon #11 is the first issue of this e-zine that I have read, but I must say that I was impressed. Most of the offerings are fantasy to dark fantasy—though the first story is probably best categorized as SF—yet each tale is unique, and I’d recommend it to any reader of speculative fiction. […]

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Strange Horizons, August 2007

“Artifice and Intelligence” by Tim Pratt in Strange Horizons is a quirky approach to the artificial intelligence motif. “The vast network of Indian tech support call centers and their deep data banks” have awakened, announcing their sentience and their name: Saraswati. The story follows three people who have been affected by this: Pramesh, who must […]

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Hub #24-26

Ian McHugh’s poetically titled “Requiem in D-Minor (for prions, whale and burning bush)” in Hub #24 elegantly connects all these elements and more. However, long-time readers and viewers of science fiction will find most of the tropes already familiar and may not be surprised by the outcome to which their interconnections eventually lead. […]

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Lone Star Stories #23, October 2007

Issue 23 of Lone Star Stories contains three pieces of short fiction. The first, “Stickmen” by Forrest Aguirre, is a delicate tale about loss of innocence and growing up. A group of boys on a camping trip create stick figures out of the materials available to them on the forest floor and reveal something […]

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